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A beleaguered Malaysian Airlines has launched a probe after one of its planes flew in the wrong direction towards Melbourne, rather than Kuala Lumpur for eight minutes during a Christmas Day flight from New Zealand.
The Flight MH132 from Auckland to Kuala Lumpur took off at 2.23 am on Christmas Day but flew south over the Tasman Sea rather than taking a more direct ‘north-west’ route to the Malaysian capital, radar data showed.
Just eight minutes into the flight, the pilot questioned the Airbus A330’s path with air traffic control when he became concerned that the flight was heading towards Melbourne, Australia and not towards its intended destination. The pilot then turned north-west.
Airways, which manages air traffic control for New Zealand, said there were no safety concerns but it would investigate why the normal flight path had been changed.
Meanwhile, Malaysian Airlines today said the pilot of MH132 was given the latest flight plan by the airline’s Operations Dispatch Centre while Auckland’s Air Traffic Control was inadvertently given an earlier flight plan.
As many as 577 crew and passengers had lost their lives on two separate Malaysia Airlines flights last year. Flight MH370 disappeared between Kuala Lumpur and Beijing for unknown reasons in March and MH17 was shot down by a Russian-made missile over Ukraine in July. The airlines had suffered heavy financial losses in both the disasters.
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